Kenya finally gets a new wildlife law

The conservation fraternity in Kenya was elated when the Wildlife Conservation and Management Act 2013 was finally passed with WWF having coordinated the input of environmental civil society organizations views. This law was a culmination of efforts spanning over 15 years’ to get a comprehensive and all-inclusive legislation in place.

The Wildlife Act came into force on January 10th 2014, having received Presidential assent on 24th December 2013. This new law is aimed at improving the protection, conservation, sustainable use and management of the country’s wildlife resources. Consequently, the law was drafted with a view to addressing the loss of wildlife, which had exacerbated despite high profile conservation efforts, by various institutions. This loss in wildlife resources was attributed in varying proportions to a combination of policy, institutional and market failures.

This new law provides for restructured governance of wildlife resources by separating the regulation and management functions from those of research. Furthermore, new structures have been established at the County level in accordance with the Constitution of Kenya 2010. The Act also sets out important principles that include:

Effective public participation in the management of wildlife resources, thereby setting a basis for the strengthening of community based natural resources management.

Use of the ecosystem approach in the management of wildlife

Equitable sharing of benefits accruing from wildlife resources by Kenyans

Sustainable utilization

Recognition and encouragement of wildlife conservation and management as a form of land use on public, community and private land. It further gives every person the right to practice wildlife conservation as a land use and states that benefits of wildlife conservation shall be derived by the land users in order to offset cost and to ensure the value and management of wildlife do not decline.

The perennial challenge of poaching and wildlife habitat destruction has been looked into with this law setting out stiffer fines and punishments for offenders (a move that is expected to discourage would be offenders). As a demonstration of how effective this new law can be, on January 28th 2014, a Kenyan court handed a record sentence to a Chinese ivory smuggler, the first person convicted under this new law. Mr. Tang Yong Jian was ordered to pay 20 million shillings (170,500 euros, 233,000 dollars) or serve a jail term of seven years for being in possession of a tusk weighing 3.4 kilogrammes (7.5 pounds).

Communities living with wildlife or those that live adjacent to protected areas will be a happier lot as this law provides for a significant increase in the awards for injury and death resulting from wild animals.

WWF in Kenya remains committed to ensuring the full operalisation of this Act and engage in continuous efforts to improve the sustainable management of wildlife resources in Kenya and in the trans frontier areas.

The new wildlife law in Kenya will see better protection of endangered species such as rhino